Claude Debussy`s - Independent Opera
Transcription
Claude Debussy`s - Independent Opera
INDEPENDENT OPERA at Sadler’s Wells presents Claude Debussy’s In a new orchestration by Stephen McNeff Lilian Baylis Studio 1 Messages from Honorary Patrons Messages from Independent Opera What Bill and Judy Bollinger have achieved over the past four years is remarkable in itself. It has made a real impact in this country and has created a stir among opera professionals in a wider Europe. Their generosity has provided performance opportunities for many talented young artists, and the forthcoming CD recording of last year’s Maconchy double-bill will form a souvenir of that. This year’s production of Pelléas et Mélisande brings to a close our four-year cycle of annual full-scale opera productions in London. Our goal of encouraging new talent at all levels in the production of opera lives on in the form of INDEPENDENT OPERA Artist Support. Created two years ago, this broad initiative of fellowships and scholarships is currently supporting more than 20 artists at various stages of their careers. We are immensely proud of this extended Independent Opera family and look forward to watching their careers flourish. Their other enduring legacy will be the extensive programme of scholarships and fellowships that will help to sustain and develop young artists at the formative time of their careers. In today’s competitive market place, that is more than ever valuable, and I thank them for it. We hope you enjoy this evening’s performance. Nicholas Payne Director of Opera Europa Honorary Patron 2008 Simon Keenlyside Anna Gustafson Director of Operations & Chief Executive, Artist Support Independent Opera at Sadler’s Wells ENT OP ER In a new orchestration by Stephen McNeff Published by Peters Edition Conductor Dominic Wheeler Director Alessandro Talevi Set & Costume Designer Madeleine Boyd Lighting Designer Matthew Haskins Assistant Conductor & Vocal Coach Natalie Murray Mélisande Ingrid Perruche Golaud Andrew Foster-Williams Arkel Frédéric Bourreau Yniold Caryl Hughes Founding Patrons Judith Bollinger William Bollinger END Music by Claude Debussy Geneviève Julie Pasturaud (18, 20 Nov), Marie Elliott (22 Nov) Trustees Annita Bennett Judith Bollinger Nigel Carrington Wilson Kerr (Chairman) P DE Opera in five acts Pelléas Thorbjørn Gulbrandsøy Honorary Patrons Laurence Cummings Michael Grandage Wasfi Kani OBE Nicholas Payne This production of Pelléas et Mélisande is the fulfilment of a long-nurtured dream to stage this opera in an intimate space. On a wider scale, Stephen McNeff’s re-orchestration for 35 players, published by Peters Edition, opens up new possibilities for small and mid-size companies that previously would not have had access to this masterpiece. Médécin Vojtěch Šafařík (18, 22 Nov), Vuyani Mlinde (20 Nov) Producing and rehearsing Pelléas et Mélisande has been a joy because it is a work that musicians hold in profound affection and the artists involved have sensed the rare opportunity it offers. Director of Operations & Chief Executive, Artist Support Anna Gustafson Berger Dominic Wheeler Child Anna Wheeler Presented by Independent Opera at Sadler’s Wells Artistic Director Alessandro Talevi 18, 20, 22 November 2008 A at IN Sooner or later, most singers fortunate enough to find themselves at the pinnacle of their profession show an interest in the next generation of singers. Those at the top know that a successful career involves hard graft as well as liberal dollops of good luck. However, careful nurturing, coaching and showcasing is not luck, and it is by these methods that INDEPENDENT OPERA gives young talent the best chance of snatching good fortune. I am delighted to be associated with Independent Opera’s production of Pelléas et Mélisande, an opera that continues to fascinate me. Complementing our behind-the-scenes support in the operatic field, this new chapter in our existence opens with the release by Chandos in early 2009 of a studio recording of our 2007 production, Elizabeth Maconchy’s The Sofa and The Departure. Pelléas et Mélisande Sad ler ’s Wells Simon Keenlyside Honorary Patron 2008 Alessandro Talevi Artistic Director 2008 Independent Opera at Sadler’s Wells There will be a 20-minute interval between Act III and Act IV The first performance of Pelléas et Mélisande was given at Opéra-Comique in Paris on 30 April 1902 www.independentopera.com Registered Charity no. 1117559 2 1 Synopsis ACT I ACT II ACT III Scene 1 A fountain in the park Pelléas takes Mélisande Scene 1 One of the castle towers Mélisande stands by her When she tries to flee, he grabs her by the hair and drags her to the “Fountain of the Blind”, an old well in the castle window, singing while she arranges her hair. Pelléas appears across the room. Arkel is dismayed: “If I were God, I would park. Mélisande leans over into the water and her long hair on the path below. He tells her to lean down and give him have pity on the hearts of men.” tumbles in. While Pelléas asks her about her first encounter her hand. He is leaving the next day. She leans out, and her with Golaud, which was also by a fountain, she plays with hair tumbles down and envelopes him. He ecstatically Scene 3 A fountain in the park Yniold is trying to retrieve of the other world than to the smallest secret of those eyes!” her wedding ring. Against Pelléas’s advice, she throws it winds it around himself and the branches of a willow tree. his golden ball from underneath a large stone, which he Scene 1 A forest Golaud, grandson of Arkel, King of higher and higher, and it drops into the well, just as the Mélisande senses Golaud nearby; he steps out from the complains, is “heavier than the whole world”. A herd of Allemonde, has lost his way while out hunting. At the clock strikes midday. Mélisande is horrified, not knowing shadows and chides them for their childish behaviour. sheep passes by. Suddenly, they fall silent. Yniold asks the edge of a spring, he happens upon a young woman who what to tell Golaud. “The truth,” says Pelléas, “the truth.” is weeping. She evades all his questions with mysterious shepherd, why they are silent. “Because this is not the way Scene 2 The castle vaults Golaud leads Pelléas down into the to their stable,” he replies. half-answers. When Golaud notices her crown in the water Scene 2 A room in the castle From his bed, an injured vaults and asks him if he can smell the scent of death rising and offers to retrieve it, she flies into a blind panic and Golaud tells Mélisande what happened just as the clock up from the darkness. Pelléas feels suffocated, and they exit. threatens to throw herself into the water in its place. The struck midday: he was hunting in the forest when his horse girl eventually gives him her name: Mélisande. Golaud is suddenly bolted and ran into a tree, throwing him off and Scene 3 A terrace at the entrance to the vaults Golaud warns responds, “I love you too.” Throughout Pelléas’s enchanted by her beauty and persuades her to leave with crushing him. He refuses the comfort Mélisande offers him, Pelléas against repetitions of incidents like that of the day impassioned declaration, she is nervous and hesitant. The him. She asks him where they are going. “I don’t know,” assuring her he only needs to sleep. She begins to weep and before; he has noticed something between Pelléas and his great castle doors swing shut. Clasping each other in an replies Golaud. “I am lost as well.” admits that she feels unhappy in the gloomy castle. Golaud wife. Mélisande is expecting a child and has to avoid any embrace, they realise that Golaud has been watching them. tries to reassure her, gently mocking her childlike desire to sort of stress; Pelléas is to avoid her as much as possible Pelléas urges Mélisande to flee; she refuses, and as Golaud Scene 2 A room in the castle Geneviève, Golaud’s mother, see the sun. He notices she is not wearing the wedding ring without appearing unfriendly. rushes forward and kills Pelléas, the lovers lock in a final is reading out a letter to Arkel, her aged father-in-law. The he gave her. She stutters that she thinks she lost it down letter was written by Golaud to his half-brother Pelléas, in a cave at the beach, and had to run away before the sea Scene 4 In front of the castle Golaud sits under Mélisande’s and tells how he met and subsequently married Mélisande. came in. Golaud is furious, and dispatches her into the window with Yniold, his son by his first wife, and interrogates Golaud would like to bring Mélisande back with him to live night, telling her go with Pelléas to find the ring: “I would him about Pelléas and Mélisande. The vague answers only in the family castle, but is afraid of what Arkel may think rather have you lose everything than lose that ring, you don’t heighten his suspicions. A light goes on in Mélisande’s room A room in the castle Arkel, Golaud and a doctor are gathered of the union. If the family will accept her, then Pelléas is know from whence it came!” and Golaud lifts the boy up to look through the window, around Mélisande’s bed. The doctor reassures Golaud that the telling him to describe what he sees. Yniold tells him small wound he inflicted is not the cause of her weak state. to light a lantern in the castle tower on the third day after Scene 4 A fountain in the park Pelléas bids goodbye to Mélisande and tell her that he loves her; she quickly embrace. Mélisande is dragged off by Golaud. ACT V receiving the letter; Golaud will see it from his ship in the Scene 3 Outside a cave Pelléas has brought Mélisande to that Pelléas is sitting with Mélisande and they are both Golaud bitterly repents what he has done. When Mélisande harbour. If the lantern is not lit, he will sail away, never the cave by the sea where she told Golaud she’d lost his ring, motionless, staring at the light. The boy, suddenly overcome regains consciousness, he asks to be left alone with her. to return. Arkel tells Geneviève that they must accept his so she can describe it properly if he asks her. All at once by fear, has to be let down by the furious Golaud, who He asks forgiveness and demands she admit she had been decision: after Golaud’s first wife died, Arkel had hoped he the clouds part and the cave glitters in the moonlight. Three drags him away. unfaithful to him with Pelléas. Golaud is again frustrated by would marry into another powerful family. Nevertheless, paupers are revealed, asleep in the cave. Mélisande and Arkel bows to fate: “We only ever see the underside of Pelléas leave, distinctly uneasy about what they have seen. Destiny, and that too of our own destiny.” Pelléas enters, her elliptical answers: “I do not understand each thing I say, INTERVAL (20 minutes) and tells Arkel he would like to travel to see a friend on ACT IV father is seriously ill within the castle walls. Geneviève what I know… I say no longer what I would…” her death. Mélisande is shown her little premature baby. The castle servant women inexplicably enter the room, instructs Pelléas to light the lamp as a signal to Golaud. Scene 3 In front of the castle Mélisande tells Geneviève that Scene 1 A room in the castle Pelléas tells Mélisande that as and at the moment of Mélisande’s death, they drop to his father is now better, he is to leave. He asks to have one their knees. She dies, mutely, leaving Golaud racked with last meeting that evening, by the well in the park. despair. Arkel tries to comfort him, saying that Fate alone she finds the park and castle gloomy and Geneviève does her decides everything on earth; Mélisande’s child will take her best to comfort her. Pelléas joins them, and together they Scene 2 A room in the castle Arkel is happy that Pelléas’s gaze at the sea, shrouded in darkness and mist. They see the father has recovered, and tells Mélisande that she will be ship that brought Mélisande leave the harbour as night falls, the cornerstone of the new era of light and love within the though a storm is gathering. Geneviève tells Pelléas to escort old castle. Golaud storms in, agitated, and announces that Mélisande back to the castle. Pelléas tells Mélisande he is to leave the following day. Crestfallen, she wants to know why. do you see… I do not know what I have said… I do not know Arkel re-enters and accuses Golaud of driving Mélisande to his deathbed. This is not permitted because Pelléas’s own 2 telling her to shut her wide eyes: “I am nearer to the secrets Ingrid Perruche and Thorbjørn Gulbrandsøy in rehearsal place on earth. “It’s now the turn of the poor little one.” Alessandro Talevi Pelléas will leave that evening. He demands to see his sword. The performance begins at 7pm and ends at approximately 9.50pm. When Mélisande gives it to him, he bursts into a fit of rage, There is a 20-minute interval between Act III and Act IV. 3 “F irst of all, ladies and gentlemen, you must the abandoned Rodrigue et Chimène project, forget that you are singers.” Debussy’s “demands a type of music I can no longer write.” advice to the cast rehearsing the original He chose to avoid not only the arias, duets and production of Pelléas et Mélisande accurately other set-pieces already rejected by Wagner but reflected his approach to writing the opera. also, he hoped, Wagnerism itself. While not forgetting that he was a composer – he The fact that he was less than completely obviously could not agree with the poet successful in excluding operatic precedent is Stephane Mallarmé’s opinion that any music scarcely a matter for regret. Take the key scene, added to Maeterlinck’s play would be worse than Act IV, Scene 4, where Pelléas and Mélisande superfluous – Debussy did try to forget that he meet for the last time in the park outside the was an opera composer. He tried, that is, to castle. Nothing could be less operatic than their forget what the audience of the day expected confession of love: “Je t’aime,” declares Pelléas from opera, which, as he knew from his work on on a minimal melodic inflection and in complete Back to basics Debussy, Pelléas and the unavoidable legacy of Wagner Reactions to Pelléas et Mélisande “ Rhythm, melody, tonality, these are three things unknown to Monsieur Debussy and deliberately disdained by him. His music is vague, floating, without colour and without shape, without movement and without life…” Arthur Pougin, Le Ménestrel, Paris, 4 May 1902 “ Simply felt and expressed human feelings and human suffering in human terms, despite the outward appearance the characters give of living in a mysterious dream.” Composer Vincent d’Indy, 1902 Jean Périe, the first Pelléas one reason why, in addition to the play’s once described as the ideal material for an The public dress rehearsal of Pelléas et Mélisande at the Opéra- orchestral silence; “Je t’aime aussi,” Mélisande opera, he chose to fashion a libretto from it. Comique on 28 April 1902 must have been a painful experience replies on an unaccompanied monotone. But Paradoxical that might be, but the fact is that for Debussy. He had waited seven years to see his opera staged then, after a pause, and over expressive melody while he could resist Die Meistersinger and the and had been working with the company nearly every day since on horn, flute and solo cello in radiant F sharp Ring cycle, Tristan und Isolde and Parsifal the middle of January. Perhaps the worst moment was the reaction major harmonies, Pelléas all but bursts into song (which he saw in Bayreuth in 1888 and 1889 to Mélisande’s confession to Golaud, “Je ne suis pas heureuse ici” with the poetic observation “On dirait que ta voix respectively) made an impression too profound (I am not happy here) in Act II, Scene 2: “Nous non plus!” a passé sur la mer au printemps!” If he is not to leave him unaffected. (Nor are we!) was the reply from the audience. As well as that, the “singing” at this point, he surely is a little later Claude Debussy on the day after the first performance of Pelléas et Mélisande 4 First performance uncanny correspondence to what he had audience was irritated by Yniold’s constant appeals to his “petit when the instrumental melody reappears Although he claimed to know Tristan und Isolde père” in Act III, Scene 4 and disturbed by Golaud’s bullying of the fortissimo in the strings and he enters at the top by heart – and proved it one day by playing it little boy into spying on Pelléas and Mélisande in the same scene. of his range with an ecstatic “Je l’ai trouvée.” through from start to finish – it is perhaps less in By the fourth act, however, the signs were more favourable and the evidence here than Parsifal. Even so, the Tristan fifth went particularly well. This was the first scene Debussy wrote when he love scene is a significant presence in another started on the work in 1893 and, although he nocturnal erotic encounter, Act III, Scene 1, Although the censor had insisted on a small cut in that scene with revised it several times and was able to exorcise where Mélisande lets down her hair from her Golaud and Yniold, Debussy could be happy with the success of from it what he called “the ghost of old Klingsor, room in the tower to Pelléas standing enraptured the official first night two days later. Messager departed for London alias R. Wagner”, the echoes of Massenet, below. Several of the numerous echoes of after conducting only the first three nights but, thanks not least happily, remain. Parsifal occur in the orchestral interludes, to Mary Garden’s magical Mélisande, the box office registered particularly in the extensions Debussy was called a profit on most of the initial run of 14 performances – all of Around this time, Debussy had been planning to upon to make, under pressure, during the which were conscientiously attended by Ravel and like-minded write an article on “The uselessness of rehearsal period (and which are omitted in this progressive companions eager to outnumber those who jeered Wagnerism” and was very conscious of the version). There are others, however, not least in at the work and could find “no music” in it. Saint-Saëns, who dangers of succumbing, like so many of his the musical characterisation of Golaud, whose represented an older generation, cancelled his holiday so that he French contemporaries, to “old Klingsor’s” motif is not unlike that of Parsifal himself, could stay in Paris and boo Debussy’s opera. But neither he nor influence. And yet the score of Pelléas et and whose brutal treatment of Mélisande in those of a similar opinion could prevent a revival of Pelléas in Mélisande is abundant in examples of it. Indeed, Act IV, Scene 2 recalls Klingsor’s tormenting of October nor, indeed, its presentation in nearly every season at the Maeterlinck’s play has several close parallels Kundry. Arkel is related by his harmonic Opéra-Comique from 1902 to 1914, by which time it had achieved with Tristan und Isolde – which might be language and the orchestral more than 100 performances. Gerald Larner © 2008 f continued overleaf 5 colours that go with it to Parsifal’s veteran want it to dominate. I don’t want it to be knight, Gurnemanz. subordinate to something else. It’s too humble. There isn’t enough music for me. There are very Another paradox associated with Debussy’s fine harmonies, very good orchestral effects… attitude to Wagner is his use of leitmotifs. On But as far as I am concerned it is no more than the one hand, he condemned the Wagnerian Maeterlinck’s play alone, without music.” leitmotif as a “visiting card” presented Adapting Pelléas et Mélisande for chamber orchestra Stephen McNeff When Dominic Wheeler approached wind solos, but he creates a normal opera house. An average string automatically on entry; on the other hand, he While Strauss’s reaction is for the most part me on behalf of Independent Opera constantly mobile soundworld by section for Pelléas is normally about made extensive use of the leitmotif himself. understandable, his assertion that there are “no to make a chamber orchestra version layering and doubling, adding and 50, but in terms of sheer volume, we According to one estimate there are as many as musical phrases” is just wrong. Debussy’s score is of Pelléas et Mélisande, I was as taking away, a little more weight would not need such large numbers 13 leitmotifs in Pelléas et Mélisande, although seething with them – not as song (except in daunted as any sane person would here and reducing it again. There to produce a full rich sound. When for the listener, as distinct from the analyst, Mélisande’s folk style “Mes longs cheveux”) or as be. I had previously made reductions are few places where the entire a string section plays together, the there are no more than three of vital importance. aria, still less as dance. Musical phrases are to be of works such as Bernstein’s West orchestra plays, and though it would ear seems to hear what it wants to Two of them are introduced in the orchestral found in the detail of nearly every bar in the Side Story and Weill’s Threepenny not be right to think of the Pelléas hear. With judicious reallocation of prelude – Golaud’s ominous theme on woodwind, orchestra or in a vocal line which, neither which appears already in the fifth bar, after recitative nor heightened speech, finds the Opera and was something of an expert score as chamber music exactly, the string parts and by rescoring as a lower strings briefly set the medieval scene, and melodic implications of the natural pitch in getting the most out of small pit Debussy’s approach is a lot closer to modern composer might for a smaller Mélisande’s expressive melody on oboe shortly inflections and rhythms of Maeterlinck’s poetic bands. Dominic had witnessed this the delicate nuances of that medium orchestra, I hope I was able to largely after (it has been calculated that Golaud’s theme prose. Strauss might not have liked it but it is a when he conducted my opera Gentle than it is to, say, Wagner where the retain what Debussy wanted and stay makes 59 appearances during the course of the rare case of true equality between word and music. Giant, commissioned by the Royal orchestra is used as a much more true to his intentions. Opera House for small spaces at offensive weapon. This doesn’t mean Covent Garden. However, this was that Debussy never used the entire I have been fortunate to have spent different: Bernstein and Weill have orchestra, but I realised that the time close to an orchestra in my three a robust quality that makes them original third and auxiliary woodwind years as composer in residence with arranger-proof, but in Debussy every and heavy brass could be adequately the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. nuance matters, every note is exactly covered by smaller sections. A bigger My familiarity with orchestral sounds placed, and the sound is unique and challenge was to reproduce Debussy’s has allowed me to adopt the guiding instantly recognisable. highly individual string sound with a principle of thinking myself into reduced number of players. Debussy’s position, imagining how opera and Mélisande’s 74!). The other, which is as languid as Golaud’s motif is muscular, is Debussy did not achieve this unaided. We know heard on flute as Pelléas makes his first entry in that he studied Mussorgsky’s Boris Godunov, the Act I, Scene 2. which was written with similar ideals in mind and echoes of which are a fairly regular feature Debussy was careful, however, to draw a in Pelléas et Mélisande, not least in the role of distinction between his use of leitmotifs and Yniold. But Mussorgsky would never have told Wagner’s. Wagner uses them, he said, “to make his Boris or Dmitri to forget they were singers. symphonic music in the theatre” with the result Debussy was going back here to the first that the words and the dramatic action are principles of opera – as the arch-Wagnerite subservient to thematic development. If the Vincent d’Indy so perceptively and so surprisingly drama does not require development he avoids acknowledged when he declared, “Debussy is it: “Notice that the motif which accompanies studying scores and recordings, I A number of things helped, beginning had an orchestra of 35. If this score saw that there was a way to preserve with the fact that the chamber is a success, however, it is of course our Monteverdi!” the sound of the original. Firstly, orchestra adaptation was intended entirely due to Debussy. I simply did while some companies have made for a space that’s smaller than a what I think he might have done. Gerald Larner © 2008 successful adaptations of operas Mélisande is never altered,” he wrote. “It comes back in the fifth act unchanged in every respect, he would have scored it if he had After seeing the opera again, and because in fact Mélisande always remains the by taking a completely different same and dies without anyone – only old Arkel, approach, we agreed that this was not perhaps? – ever having understood her.” right for Pelléas. Secondly, I realised Stephen McNeff The first page of Debussy’s score of Pelléas et Mélisande the orchestra I had at my disposal It is this concern for absolute fidelity to the text was not that small: 35 musicians that distinguishes Pelléas et Mélisande from all would be a luxury in many situations but a few other operas in the repertoire. Richard (a perfectly good number for Mozart, Strauss clearly understood much of the essence for instance). of Debussy’s art when he saw the opera in Paris 6 in 1906 and just as clearly disapproved of it. “Is As I studied the score, I was struck that all there is?” he asked his companion after by Debussy’s special way of handling the first act. “There’s nothing … no musical the strings and by the rich and subtle phrases, no development. But I’m a musician sound he achieves through his scoring above all. From the moment music is in a work I for woodwinds. There are prominent 7 I ndependent Opera’s production of little that is concrete about her, but there is a the opera that Golaud is not that much in love thinking out the family tree. For me, it is this: Pelléas et Mélisande sets out to bring into stream of consciousness style in that period, in with Mélisande, especially in the scene where he Arkel had two sons, Golaud’s father and Pelléas’s sharp focus the nebulous, gauzy, dreamlike other operas that were being written: Bartók’s is describing how he has been hurt in the hunt. father; Geneviève came to the castle in very atmosphere of Maurice Maeterlinck’s words Bluebeard’s Castle and Dukas’s Ariane et He says, ‘Don’t worry, I’ll sleep like a baby.’ much the same way as Mélisande; she married and Claude Debussy’s music by abandoning Barbe-bleu. In Maeterlinck’s play and Debussy’s He is completely unaware that she is unhappy. Golaud’s father and I suspect she had an affair the medieval setting in a fairy-tale castle, the opera there is a suggestion that Mélisande has Only when she starts crying does he say, ‘What’s with Pelléas’s father – there must have been hub of the mythical kingdom – Maeterlinck’s escaped from somewhere – one of Bluebeard’s wrong?’ but even then he’s not particularly good some kind of Brüderstreit (brotherly quarrel) – invention – of Allemonde. Recent productions wives in Barbe-bleu, which is also based on at establishing exactly what is troubling her. He regularised after the death of Golaud’s father. have updated the action to the present day, a Maeterlinck text, is called Mélisande. There is very unsettled by the way she has changed the Pelléas was likely to have been well nurtured as a sacrificing much of the opera’s unique mystique, is also a sense that the castle in Pelléas et whole family dynamic. There are cryptic clues child, but with Golaud there is definite suggestion but Independent Opera’s director Alessandro Mélisande, as in Barbe-bleu and Bluebeard, that make one wonder if he is actually more in of a loveless childhood. When Mélisande Talevi has opted to place the action close to the embodies in some way the psyche of the love with his half-brother than with his wife.” arrives it’s a kind of cyclical re-enactment of time of the composition, the final decade of the characters. The idea of a sentient building runs 19th century, and the first performance, at the through many of these works. Debussy also Talevi makes the character psychology sound actor-singers need to have an idea of where the Opéra-Comique in Paris, in 1902. started work on a setting of Edgar Allan Poe’s quite Freudian, so it is no surprise that he characters have come from. The last thing I want views Debussy’s opera as a family tragedy in is singers floating about being vague and obtuse.” A Freudian fairy-tale Director Alessandro Talevi talks to Hugh Canning about his vision of Pelléas “The psychology of the characters and the The Fall of the House of Usher in which what is dynamics of their interaction all make sense subconscious in Pelléas becomes overt.” within the framework of the Victorian family: the very specific role that women play in the family, Metaphor and symbolism play a crucial role in the way they are expected to behave,” says Talevi. Maeterlinck’s play – for which he was derided “The tragedy of Mélisande is that she doesn’t fit by critics at its premiere in 1893 – but modern into the standard categories. The opera reminds productions have sought to penetrate the me of films such as The French Lieutenant’s sometimes arcane and contradictory text by Woman – if women didn’t conform to expected bringing the characters into sharper relief. social norms, they were treated as outcasts. “There is so much symbolism in this opera, “Mélisande’s story is that she comes from a but I feel that the secret of communicating it subliminal world. She enters this house and to an audience is to look through the symbols Golaud does not really know what to make at the personal relationships. Ordinary people of her, but at the same time she exerts an interacting with their loved ones very often can’t incredible influence over people because she has express their emotions in a particularly lucid a connection with a power greater than herself.” way. You can notice Golaud’s jealousy in the what happened in the previous generation. The the tradition of Greek drama and the plays of Ibsen and Strindberg. Even before the Mélisande is the first of a series of challenging mysterious appearance of Mélisande as an operatic portraits of women during the first interloper, the family is already fractured by decade of the 20th century; women such as the deaths of Golaud’s father and his first wife. Jenůfa and her infanticidal stepmother and The relationships are complicated by second Strauss’s necrophiliac Salome or matricidal marriages, as in Janáček’s Jenůfa, which had its Elektra challenge society’s convention. To some first performance only two years after Pelléas. extent, these characters reflected the changing status of women in society. They violated the “In both operas daughters atone for the sins of accepted norms of female behaviour, as did the their fathers. If you set Pelléas in the context suffragettes of the period by demanding female of a late Victorian high-bourgeois family, you emancipation and the vote. maintain a sense of the respectable on the surface, but deep down there are skeletons in “Golaud does not know how to handle the cupboard. I have had to be quite lucid in Mélisande’s strange power, Ingrid Perruche as Mélisande f continued overleaf Maggie Teyte in Pelléas, Opéra-Comique, 1908 many phrases that seem vague. Golaud is the Mélisande seems related to the fairy-tale figures embodiment of the unchanging family. When of Ondine, Melusine and Rusalka in Dvořák’s Mélisande arrives and starts pulling at the fabric opera, not-quite-human, feral figures who take of his world, he finds it profoundly disturbing. possession of a man’s soul. Mystery surrounds her origins. When we meet her, she is alone in “Golaud has a particular relationship with the forest, weeping, and she claims to have lost his brother. Mélisande brings Pelléas out of a crown. We do not know much about her. the infantilized box in which he has been metaphorically imprisoned by Golaud. That seems 8 “There are all sorts of little clues, especially to worry him more than Mélisande’s supposed in the first scene,” says Talevi. “There is infidelity. One has the feeling from the outset of 9 claustrophobic locations, self-inflicted prisons, personal experience: he always said he identified reflecting the isolation of the characters, so with Golaud when he saw his lover in the arms much so that one is hardly aware of the world of another man. That is clearly built into the outside the confines of the castles. piece. This was also the time when Freud was doing his research into women, hysteria and “That is exactly what I am trying to achieve dreams. The idea is that women are closer to the with this production. There is a suggestion of divine centre than men, but also that they are the outside world – they mention the famine dangerous: for example, the dancer Maud Allan ravaging the countryside. There are only two may have brought down the British government occasions in which the outside world does in 1916. Such women were characterized as physically impinge: the three paupers in ‘enchantresses’ who seduced prime ministers the cave and at the end when the serving and the crowned heads of Europe.” women come in. The principals have ossified in the castle. The dream world is very strong The fatally seductive woman is an archetype in this piece. There are strange, dream-like throughout history from the dangerously happenings, such as when Golaud says, ‘I fell fascinating sorceresses of the Baroque era to off my horse and the clock struck 12.’” Berg’s Lulu. I ask Talevi if he sees Mélisande as part of that tradition. In collaboration with conductor Dominic Wheeler and composer Stephen McNeff, who “The scene by the well is particularly interesting. has re-orchestrated Debussy’s score for 35 It’s the first time Pelléas and Mélisande are instruments, Talevi has opted for the composer’s alone together. Pelléas says, ‘My brother found first thoughts with much shorter interludes than you by a well,’ and she says, ‘Yes’ and he then those expanded for the first production when asks what happened. She replies, ‘He tried to it became clear that the scene-shifters needed kiss me, but I refused.’ It’s a blatant lie. But more time to change the sets. perhaps she is not deliberately manipulative. It is almost as if the world she lives in is “Today there is less reason to do the longer something she really does not want to be a part interludes, particularly because stage machinery of. Of all the characters, she comes closest to has moved on since Pelléas was first performed. having a sense of the forces of destiny around Originally opera houses had massive pieces of her. She is not quite aware of the profundity scenery and the Opéra-Comique had little in the of what she says. She never seems happy with way of backstage and wing space. I imagine it the material world. Subconsciously, maybe, she was a bit like Parsifal at Bayreuth for all those would rather be a part of the spiritual world. years. That was how Pelléas was always done, There is something transcendental about her.” so there was no option to revert to the original score. Stephen McNeff’s re-orchestration of The action of both Pelléas et Mélisande and the interludes has shed a completely different Bartók’s Bluebeard takes place in enclosed, light on the piece, because the drama suddenly Victorian hair jewellery was often given as a gift of love and remembrance becomes tight with an incredible juxtaposition of scenes. Because staging has become so fluid and symbolic and lighting so advanced, it is possible to do things very simply and not realistically, and cut quickly from one scene to the next. That is what we are doing. The short interludes help to emphasize the individual quality of those scenes.” Stephen studied composition at the Royal Academy of Music and did post-graduate research at Exeter University. He has worked extensively in opera and music theatre and held residences at Contact Theatre in Manchester, the Banff Centre and Comus Music Theatre in Canada. His music has won awards in Toronto and the Edinburgh Festival and been widely recorded and broadcast. He is known for his operas Clockwork (based on the novel by Philip Pullman) and Gentle Giant, commissioned by the Royal Opera House. He was composer in residence for three seasons with the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra for whom he wrote four major orchestral works, Heiligenstadt, Secret Destinations and the Sinfonia (all premiered by Marin Alsop), and the choral work, Weathers, conducted by David Hill. He won the British Composer Award for best stage work in 2007. Plans include an opera based on Giles Foden’s novel The Last King of Scotland and a double percussion concerto commissioned by the Borletti-Buitoni Trust for O Duo. Stephen McNeff Born in Dorset, Dominic studied at Clare College, Cambridge, the Royal College of Music and the Liszt Academy in Budapest. For INDEPENDENT OPERA at Sadler’s Wells he conducted The Sofa/The Departure; for ENO, The Barber of Seville, Siegfried, Rhinegold, War and Peace, The Capture of Troy and The Turk in Italy; for Opera North, L’elisir d’amore and Don Giovanni; for Scottish Opera, Don Giovanni and Alceste (also at the Opéra de Nice); for Opera New Zealand, Manon; for Holland Park, Tosca, Werther, La bohème and Madam Butterfly; for Chelsea Opera Group, I Puritani, Giovanna d’Arco, Cendrillon, Ermione and Lucrezia Borgia; for ETO, The Pearl Fishers, The Marriage of Figaro, Fidelio and Macbeth; for CBTO, Faust; for the RAM, A Night at the Chinese Opera and for Royal Opera House at the Linbury, Gentle Giant and Echo and Narcissus. Recent work includes concerts with the City of London Sinfonia, the London Mozart Players and the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, and Paradise Moscow for RAM. Dominic Wheeler Alessandro is Artistic Director 2008 for INDEPENDENT OPERA at Sadler’s Wells. Born in Johannesburg, he read Music and History of Art at the University of the Witwatersrand. After completing an MA, he furthered his studies at the Royal Academy of Music as a vocal accompanist. In 2007 he was awarded third prize at the finals of the European Opera Directing Prize. For Independent Opera, he has directed The Sofa/The Departure, Orlando and La scala di seta. Other productions include Partenope (Opéra Les Azuriales, France); L’occasione fa il ladro/La Colombe (Guildhall School); Gräfin Mariza (Johannesburg); Un Giorno di Regno (Pretoria); and La Princesse Jaune, Noye’s Fludde and La voix humaine (London Oratory Theatre). Upcoming productions include La fedeltà premiata (RAM) and La cambiale di matrimonio/The Marriage (Guildhall). He recently revived Teatro la Fenice’s production of Ariadne auf Naxos in Bolzano and Lucca, and he returns to Italy to revive Peter Grimes (conducted by Jeffrey Tate) at the Teatro San Carlo in Naples. Alessandro Talevi Madeleine trained in theatre design at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design. Recent opera designs include Partenope for Opéra Les Azuriales, Cap Ferrat, France; L’occasione fa il ladro/La Colombe for the Guildhall School; The Sofa/The Departure for INDEPENDENT OPERA at Sadler’s Wells; Orfeo ed Euridice for Theatre Augsburg, Germany and La gazzetta and La Scala di Seta for the Rossini Festival in Wildbad, Germany. Non-opera design work includes All about it (Big Fish Theatre) and Rhymes, reasons and bombass beatz (Oval Theatre). She was a finalist in the European Opera Directing Prize 2007 for her design concept for Rusalka. Plans for 2009 include costume design for Peter Grimes at the San Carlo Opera House, Napoli and design for La fedeltà premiata for the Royal Academy of Music. Madeleine Boyd Orchestrator Artist Biographies but we should not discount Maeterlinck’s Conductor Director Set & Costume Designer Hugh Canning © 2008 10 11 Lighting Designer Natalie Murray Assistant Conductor & Vocal Coach Frédéric Bourreau Arkel Marie Elliott Geneviève (22 Nov) 12 Matthew gained a BA (Hons) in Lighting Design at Rose Bruford College. His opera credits include INDEPENDENT OPERA at Sadler’s Wells (The Sofa/The Departure), ETO (House on the Moon, Tolomeo, Orfeo), RCM (Le nozze di Figaro), Classical Opera Company (Così fan tutte), Bridewell (Ned Rorem shorts); Young Vic/ETO (Tobias & the Angel) and Opéra Azuriales, France (Partenope). His theatre credits include Edinburgh Festival (Only The Brave), Albany Theatre (What Does it Take?), Gate Theatre (Mud), Trafalgar Studios (Lovely & Misfit), Hackney Empire (Ana in Love), Bridewell (We’ll Gather Lilacs), BAC (Orpheus Descending) and Riverside Studios (Four Knights in Knaresborough). He has created architectural and site-specific projects for Kensington Palace (Dido, Queen of Carthage), The Shout/De La Warr Pavilion (Sea Tongue) and Greenwich & Docklands Festival (Encounters). Plans include Romeo and Juliet at Wilton’s Music Hall and La fedeltà premiata at the RAM. Andrew studied at the Royal Academy of Music. Operatic roles include: Alidoro (La cenerentola) for Glyndebourne and WNO; Count (Le nozze di Figaro) at the Beaune Festival; Leporello (Don Giovanni) and Winterreise for Opera North; Argante (Rinaldo) and Garibaldo (Rodelinda) for Göttingen Handel Festival; Purcell’s King Arthur and Publio (La clemenza di Tito) for ENO; Larkens (La fanciulla del West) for the Royal Opera House and Leone (Tamerlano) with Washington National Opera. Concert performances include Haydn’s Nelson Mass with the Cleveland Symphony Orchestra; Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 in San Francisco; Mozart’s Requiem (Mostly Mozart, Barbican); Handel’s L’Allegro with Les Arts Florissants (BBC Proms). Plans include Elijah for the Cleveland Symphony; Handel’s Messiah with New York Philharmonic; Haydn’s The Seasons with Netherlands Philharmonic; Nick Shadow (The Rake’s Progress) for Basel Chamber Orchestra; Zebul (Jephtha) for Opera National du Rhin and Ismenor (Dardanus) with Emmanuelle Haïm. Natalie studied at the Sydney Conservatorium, the Guildhall School and the National Opera Studio. She is a professor at the Royal College of Music and opera coach to the Jette Parker Young Artist Programme (ROH) and the National Opera Studio. She is also Artistic Advisor and Vocal Consultant to INDEPENDENT OPERA at Sadler’s Wells. Natalie began her career on the music staff of Welsh National Opera and continues to work for them as a guest artist. She has also worked for Glyndebourne Festival Opera, ETO, Savoy Opera, Opera Holland Park and the BBC Cardiff Singer of the World. Natalie has studied conducting with Jorma Panula and was a 2007 London Symphony Chorus Conducting Scholar. She has assisted Rinaldo Alessandrini, Nicholas Kok, Peter Robinson and James MacMillan, and has recently conducted Partenope (Opéra Les Azuriales, France), 20 Women Singing (WNO), the Contemporary Opera Showcase (NOS) and workshops of Don Carlo and The Rake’s Progress (Royal National Theatre). Norwegian baritone Thorbjørn Gulbrandsøy received his Opera Diploma from the Royal Academy of Music, where he studied with Glenville Hargreaves and Ingrid Surgenor, and sang the title role in Gianni Schicchi, Anthenor (Dardanus) and Night Watchman (A Night at the Chinese Opera). In 2003 he won the Nordic Pentti Koskimies Lied Competition. He recently made his BBC Proms debut in Grieg’s Four Psalms for Chorus and Baritone Solo with the BBC Symphony Chorus. Thorbjørn made his debut at the Norwegian National Opera as Dancairo in Carmen, and later sang the role of Dr Falke (Die Fledermaus) with the Norwegian National Opera on tour. In 2008 he sang Dancairo (Carmen) in his home town of Bergen and Pontifex 1 (St Matthew Passion) at the Glyndebourne Festival. He has also sung the title role in Le nozze di Figaro and Masetto in Don Giovanni. Plans include Danilo (The Merry Widow) in Savannah and a return to Glyndebourne to understudy the role of Morales (Carmen). The present production is his London debut. Born in Orléans, Frédéric studied at the Sorbonne before studying singing at the Paris Conservatory. He studies with Malcolm King and John Tomlinson. At the Conservatory, he sang Sprecher (Die Zauberflöte), Purcell’s Fairy Queen and Don Alfonso (Così fan tutte). He made his Montpellier Opera debut in 2004 as Basilio (Il barbiere di Siviglia) and for the same company he has appeared in Glanert’s Les trois enigmes and as Antonio (Le nozze di Figaro). Other roles include Sarastro (Die Zauberflöte) for Avignon Opera, later revived in Reims and Vichy; Commendatore (Don Giovanni) at Mons en Bareuil; Pistola (Falstaff) in Limoges and Reims; Grenvil (La traviata) for Avignon Opera and Toulon Opera; Commendatore at Théâtre de Saint Quentin en Yvelines; and Arkel (Pelléas et Mélisande) for Tours and Montpellier. Plans include Truffaldino (Ariadne auf Naxos), Ambroise (Mireille) in Tours and Simone (Gianni Schicchi) for Massy Opera. Caryl studied law at SOAS in London before taking up a place at the Royal Academy of Music, where she studied on the opera course with Noelle Barker and Audrey Hyland. She was a finalist in the 2007 Kathleen Ferrier Awards and last year received an inaugural HRH Prince of Wales scholarship for Advanced Study in Music. Other awards include the W. Towyn Roberts scholarship (National Eisteddfod of Wales, 2005). She was a finalist in the Welsh Singer’s Competition 2006. In 2007-8, Caryl made her Scottish Opera debut in the title role of La cenerentola. Other roles include Flora (Jonathan Dove’s The Enchanted Pig) for the Young Vic Theatre/The Opera Group; and Little Moon (A Night at the Chinese Opera) and Female Chorus The Rape of Lucretia, both for RAO. Caryl has completed her studies at the Cardiff International Academy of Voice, and recently sang Teti for Welsh National Opera (Le nozze di Teti e di Peleo). Plans include Sifare cover (Mitridate) for WNO and Varvara (Katya Kabanova) and cover Dorabella (Così fan tutte) for Scottish Opera. Caryl Hughes Born in Devon, Marie studied at the Guildhall School and on the Royal Academy of Music Opera Course. In 2004 she was awarded the Erich Vietheer Memorial Award. Opera roles include Mistress Quickly (Falstaff) with RAM; Florence Pike (Albert Herring) with Almaviva Opera; Marcellina (Figaro) with Eastern Opera; Bradamante (Alcina) and Olga (Eugene Onegin) for ETO (and for Opera By Definition); and Angelina (Le cenerentola) for Stanley Hall Opera. She was the understudy for the title role in Orlando for INDEPENDENT OPERA at Sadler’s Wells; Irene (Theodora) and Geneviève (Pelléas et Mélisande) for Glyndebourne Touring Opera; and Eduige (Rodelinda) and the title role in Giulio Cesare for Glyndebourne Festival Opera. Oratorio performances include Messiah with Harry Christophers and The Sixteen. Future engagements include Osmino (La fida ninfa) at Scuola Grande di S. Giovanni Evangelista, Venice and at the Cadogan Hall with La Serenissima. Vuyani began his training with Wilhelm Theunessen at the Free State Musicon, South Africa. He has also studied at the Opera Queensland Young Artists’ Programme, the Royal College of Music and the Benjamin Britten International Opera School. Roles include Sparafucile (Rigoletto), Angelotti (Tosca) and Leporello (Don Giovanni) for Opera Queensland; Colline (La bohème) for South African State Theatre; Commendatore (Don Giovanni) and Prince Gremin (Eugene Onegin) for British Youth Opera; and Bartolo (Le nozze di Figaro) for the RCM. Vuyani is a member of the Royal Opera House Jette Parker Young Artists Programme and last season sang Second Armed Man (Die Zauberflöte), Zaretsky (Eugene Onegin) and Cappadocian (Salome). This season he sings Jake Wallace (La fanciulla del West), Tutor (Elektra), Count Ceprano (Rigoletto) and Tom (Un ballo in maschera). In future seasons he will tour with John Eliot Gardiner and the LSO, return to Covent Garden for a guest engagement and appear in two productions for Grange Park Opera. Vuyani Mlinde Andrew Foster-Williams Golaud Artist Biographies Artist Biographies Matthew Haskins Thorbjørn Gulbrandsøy Pelléas Yniold Médécin (20 Nov) 13 Geneviève (18 & 20 Nov) Ingrid Perruche Mélisande Vojtěch Šafařik Médécin (18 & 22 Nov) Born in Bordeaux, Julie studied art history and law before studying music at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama, where she completed her Master in Music Performance and took part in the opera course. She is currently studying with Rudolf Piernay. She was a finalist in the Richard Tauber Prize in 2003 and won the Ministére des Affaires Etrangères Prize in 2004 and the Wessex Glyndebourne Association Award in 2006. Opera engagements have included Mercedes (Carmen) for GTO, Laura (Iolanta) at the Royal Festival Hall, Speranza (Orféo) at the Opéra National de Lyon and the title role in The Rape of Lucretia conducted by Peter Robinson in London. She made her Glyndebourne Festival Opera debut and her Royal Albert Hall debut in the role of Dama (Macbeth) in 2007. Plans include Mastrilla and Brambilla (La périchole) at Lille Opera and L’Opéra de Nantes and Angers, and La Virtu (L’incoronazione di Poppea) at L’Opéra National de Bordeaux. After studying humanities and receiving a first prize in singing and chamber music in Orléans, Ingrid attended the conservatoires in Lyon and Paris, where she studied with Glenn Chambers. Among her operatic roles are Lucy (The Telephone), Bastienne (Bastien et Bastienne), Larissa (Gilbert Amy’s Le premier cercle), Poppea (Agrippina), Mélisande (Pelléas et Mélisande), Almiréna (Rinaldo) and La voix humaine. She has recently sung Susanna (Le nozze di Figaro) in Caen; Agathe (Véronique) at the Châtelet; Zerlina (Don Giovanni), Eurydice (Orphée) and Pamina (Die Zauberflöte) in Avignon and Tours; Servilia (La clemenza di Tito) in Rouen and Cleopatra (Giulio Cesare) in Nancy. Her concert performances include Mendelssohn’s Elias, Schumann’s Manfred and Lili Boulanger’s Pie Jesu. She will soon appear in Rouen in the title role of Véronique, at the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées for the revival of the Da Ponte trilogy, in Bordeaux at Fortuna (L’incoronazione di Poppea) and at the Opéra de Lille as Iphise (Dardanus). Born in the Czech Republic, Vojtěch graduated from Prague State Music Conservatory before attending the Benjamin Britten International Opera School, where he studied with Timothy Evans-Jones. BBIOS operatic roles included Forester (The Cunning Little Vixen), Ottone (L’incoronazione di Poppea) and Mercurio (Atalanta); other roles include Leporello (Don Giovanni) at the International Opera Studio, Komische Oper Berlin; Badger/Parson (The Cunning Little Vixen) at Woodhouse; Father (The Jewel Box) for Bampton Classical Opera and Masetto (Don Giovanni) in the Czech Republic. Recent concert engagements include The Fairy Queen at the Festival Aix-en-Provence under William Christie, Brahms’s Requiem, the title role in Handel’s Saul, Polyphemus (Acis and Galatea) and Bach’s St John’s Passion. Plans include Guglielmo (Così fan tutte) for the National Theatre, Prague. Vojtěch is a recipient of an INDEPENDENT OPERA Postgraduate Voice Fellowship (RCM), a Samling Foundation Scholar and the second prize winner of the Clonter Opera Prize 2008. Ingrid Perruche and Andrew Foster-Williams Andrew Foster-Williams and Thorbjørn Gulbrandsøy Director Alessandro Talevi Orchestra Double bass Ben Griffiths Rebecca Welsh Trumpet Fraser Tannock William Palmer Flute Daniel Watts Harp Hayley Wild Flute & Piccolo Daniel Parkin Percussion Alasdair Kelly Second Violin Katy Gorsuch Johns Andrew Harvey Jessica Holly Maleham Anna Pym Oboe Gwenllian Davies Répétiteur & French language coach Ouri Bronchti Viola Oliver Wilson Wei Wei Tan Julia O’Riordan Helen Sanders-Hewett Clarinet Andrew Mason Christopher Walters First Violin Alex Afia (leader) Alan Uren Sarah Sew Anna Harpham Marcia Buta Emma Wragg Cello Rebecca Knight Niamh Molloy Léonie Adams Heidi Parsons Production Staff Production Manager Andrew Quick Assistant Production Manager Stuart Relph Costume Supervisor Estelle Butler Wardrobe Mistress Jane Temple Stage Manager on the Book Wendy Griffin-Reid Assistant Stage Manager Miriam Gosling Stage Carpenter John Curry Wardrobe Assistant and Dresser Sophie O’Neil Lighting Programmer Richard Godin Costume Makers Sarah Edwards, Sue Long, Ann Maskrey Hair and Make-up Artist Richard Muller Production Electrician Jonathon Lyle Scenery Capital Scenery Oboe & Cor Anglais Jennie-Lee Keetley Bassoon Matthew Orange Shelly Organ Horn Helen Shillito Stephen Nicholls Ailis Hill Chorus Caryl Hughes James McOran Campbell Vojtěch Šafařik Kate Symonds-Joy Adrian Ward David Webb Dancers Katryn Jackson Meritxell Pan Cabo Marie Jose Ubera Margarita Zafrilla INDEPENDENT OPERA at Sadler’s Wells Photography credits Director of Operations & Chief Executive, Artist Support Anna Gustafson Historic photographs Lebrecht Collection Head of Administration Emma Smith Orchestra Co-ordinator & Administrative Assistant Chrissy Jay Orchestra / Acknowledgements Artist Biographies Julie Pasturaud Main photography Belinda Lawley Hair jewellery photograph Swiss Victorian bracelet, c.1825, made of plaited human hair, gold and shell. © V&A Images, Victoria and Albert Museum Costume sketches Madeleine Boyd Macbeth Media Relations Additional photography Christopher Allerton (page 11 centre bottom & bottom); Christopher Ridley (page 11 centre top) Programme book credits Acknowledgements Programme Editor Inge Kjemtrup With thanks to Garsington Opera, White Light, 3 Mills Studios, Anthony Legge, David Strange and Liz Williams Public Relations Programme Design Silk Pearce Programme Assistant Emma Smith Scenic Artists Frances Waddington, Charlotte Lane, Sarah Crane Orchestration Assistant Matthew Print Orchestra Liaison Eleanor Salter 14 15 Independent Opera’s fellowships include one each for artistic directors and designers, along with 14 fellowships for singing lessons / coaching sessions and one Sponsored Artist Voice Fellowship. For individuals still in formal training, Independent Opera provides one-year scholarships at six of the UK’s major music colleges. January 2009: 13–19 Purcell, Dido and Aeneas (Aeneas), Manchester Camerata & RNCM, Philip Smith 25 Britten, Peter Grimes, Teatro San Carlo, Naples, Alessandro Talevi “ There are so very few people that help singers at the critical moments at the start of a career and what Independent Opera does makes such a difference ” Matthew Rose Wigmore Hall / IO Voice Fellowship 16 May 2009: 23, 24, 26, 28, 30 May; 1 June Britten, Death in Venice (Voice of Apollo), Opéra de Lyon, Christopher Ainslie June 2009: 6, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17 Britten, A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Bottom), Teatro alla Scala, Milan, Matthew Rose Summer 2009: Janáček, Katya Kabanova (Varvara), Opera Holland Park, Patricia Orr Donizetti, L’elisir d’amore (Gianetta), Glyndebourne Opera, Eliana Pretorian Festival Chorus, Glyndebourne Opera, Adrian Ward pa n April 2009: 15-18, 20-22, 24, 25 ‘After Dido’ (Belinda), Young Vic Theatre, in association with ENO Young Singers, Katherine Manley 23, 25 Mozart, Così fan tutte (Alfonso), Clonter Opera Theatre, James Oldfield 29, 30 April; 2, 3 May Handel, Ariodante, Cambridge Handel Opera Group, Clara Mouriz rtn p atr o March 2009: 2, 4, 7, 9 Haydn, La fedeltà premiata, RAM, Madeleine Boyd & Alessandro Talevi 21 Handel, Solomon, Solomon Choir & Orchestra, St James Piccadilly, Anna Devin 21, 23, 25, 26 Britten, Pheadra, RSAMD, Louise Collett On tour, March–June Verdi, Don Carlos (Heavenly Voice), Opera North on Tour, Rebecca Ryan f ello ws L to R: Trustee Wilson Kerr, Trustee Annita Bennett, Patricia Orr, Philip Smith, Kirstin Sharpin, Clara Mouriz, Founding Patron Judy Bollinger, Trustee Nigel Carrington h s Anna Gustafson Chief Executive, Artist Support Independent Opera at Sadler’s Wells rships We look forward to continuing our relationship with Independent Opera alumni and watching their careers flourish. February 2009: 26 February–8 March Bizet, Carmen, Royal Albert Hall, Benedict Nelson ip Independent Opera was pleased to announce its 2008/09 Fellowship and Scholarship awards on 21 June 2008 at Wigmore Hall, following our concert performance of Handel’s Orlando. s ola In addition, the WIGMORE HALL / INDEPENDENT OPERA Voice Fellowship offers the selected singer a twoyear programme of mentoring by the Wigmore Hall, with benefits to include singing lessons, coaching sessions and accompaniment as well as valuable career guidance and performance opportunities. November 2008: 21, 24 Humperdinck, Hänsel und Gretel, RAM, Meeta Raval 27 Vaughan Williams’ Symphony No. 3 with the Hallé Orchestra, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester Nadine Livingston INDEPENDENT OPERA Artist Support Forthcoming performances by IO Fellows and Scholars ch INDEPENDENT OPERA Artist Support INDEPENDENT OPERA Artist Support is a broad effort designed to support young professionals at every level in the production of opera. The programme of awards is the cornerstone of our long-term objective: to give those involved in the staging and production of opera the support they need at the outset of their careers. erships ag e L to R: Anna Devin, Nadine Livingston, Hyung tae Kim, Meeta Raval, James Oldfield, Ben Johnson, Adrian Ward, Founding Patron Judy Bollinger INDEPENDENT OPERA Artist Support 2008/9: Ongoing INDEPENDENT OPERA Artist Support recipients: IO Postgraduate Voice Fellowship Clara Mouriz IO Postgraduate Voice Fellowship Eliana Pretorian IO Postgraduate Voice Fellowship Nathan Vale IO Postgraduate Voice Fellowship (Guildhall) Benedict Nelson IO Postgraduate Voice Fellowship (Guildhall) Adrian Ward IO Vocal Scholarship at the Guildhall Anna Devin IO Postgraduate Voice Fellowship (NOS) Patricia Orr IO Vocal Scholarship at the NOS Ben Johnson IO Postgraduate Voice Fellowship (RAM) Hyung tae Kim IO Vocal Scholarship at the RAM Meeta Raval IO Postgraduate Voice Fellowship (RCM) Vojtěch Šafařik IO Vocal Scholarship at the RCM James Oldfield IO Postgraduate Voice Fellowship (RNCM) Philip Smith IO Vocal Scholarship at the RNCM Nadine Livingston IO Postgraduate Voice Fellowship (RSAMD) Kirstin Sharpin IO Vocal Scholarship at the RSAMD Louise Collett IO Sponsored Artist Voice Fellowship & IO Postgraduate Voice Fellowship Christopher Ainslie IO Postgraduate Voice Fellowship Alinka Kozari IO Postgraduate Voice Fellowship Katherine Manley IO Postgraduate Voice Fellowship Rebecca Ryan IO Artistic Director’s Fellowship Alessandro Talevi IO Designer’s Fellowship Madeleine Boyd Wigmore Hall / IO Voice Fellowship Matthew Rose For more information about INDEPENDENT OPERA Artist Support, please visit www.independentopera.com 17 PE N DENT OPE RA at IN DE Sad 18 ler ’s Wells Independent Opera at Sadler’s Wells www.independentopera.com Registered Charity no. 1117559